Evening Star Newspaper, November 20, 1929, Page 38

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WOMAN'S PAGE," Making Beds More Comfortable BY LYDIA LE BARON WALKER. With the approach of ‘Thanksgiv- | than would otherwise be needed. The ing many homemakers are wondering, should the weather suddenly turn cold, Just how they would manage to keep the home-coming family warm at night without buying extra blankets and quilts. The many beds, seldom all used at one time, must be evenly apportioned with covers, Such distribution may reason for this is that the wool, coming close to the skin, conserves the animal heat. Cotton and linen sheets dis- perse it. Kimonos made of wool challies, al- batross, wool crepe, etc., can be worn over the nightgowns for the same pur- pose of conserving the heat. An all- wool or part-wool union suit worn under the gown is excellent also. If these gar- ments are put over the radiator a litt] while before being worn, ‘the) 1 be delightfully warm to put on. e heat, kept in by the bedding, will remain a long time, A sweater can be used as a bed- Jacket. It will keep the upper part of the body delightfully warm. One can- not resort to the use of a red flannel tticoat for & foot muff, as in olden imes, since such underwear no longer is worn, but in a sweater can be requisitioned. y wrapping the feet and legs well in the sweater, some old woolen skirt or shawl, slightly warmed, comfort is assured for these members. A pair of stockings, part or all wool, is excellent to wear to keep feet and legs warm. By cutting off the feet of old stockings they can be made to do duty as sleeves, since nightgowns so seldom have sleeves nowadays, and these will provide warmth. Newspapers put between bed covers increase their warmth, not by their weight or texture, but because, not be- ing porous, they keep heat in. This use of newspapers is frequently resorted to on cold nights when camping. Any paper will do, but newspaper is gen- erally used. A hot-water bottle can do duty as a warming pan. Fill the bottle with very hot water, and run it around between sheets & few moments before occupants retire, d_the chill will be taken off the bed. Heated bricks or flat irons, well wrapped up, can do duty as hot- water bottles, if more are in demand than the homemaker has, Some of the suggestions offered can be used for ests and some by the family, but all have proven helpful at one time or another. i (Copyright, 1920.) A Sermon for Today WHE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1920, Everyday Psychology BY D; JESSE W. SPROWLS, Teacup Psychology. first impression was to laugh. could there be a leaves? bly attach any cup? cup psychology is a type. ‘This fact is not the least bit comforting to_me. It occurred to me that I should look up the literature on the subject. Hap- fi:ly I found a book with a chapter ading as follows: “Fortune-telling by Grounds in a Teacup.” The gist of teacup psychology seems to be this: “They (the tea leaves) will form groups of imaginary figures, * * The fortune-teller must egercise inge nuity to discover in these figures re- semblances to familiar things. To the chiromancer it will be easy.” What will be easy? To say that: 1, traight lines indicate long life.” . ircles indicate that money will ‘be _received.” 3. “SBquares and oblongs denote crown brings honor and suc- ess, 5. “A snake is a sign of an enemy.” ‘What does unmp’rgcychnloty imply? ‘Wishes and fears, e things any one might reasonably be expected to wish for and to avoid. Pleasure and pain? Yes. They are the essence of teacup psychology? ‘Try it out on your own teacup. (Copyright, 1920.) NANCY PAGE Fashions in Folding Fol- lowed by Nancy BY FLORENCE LA GANKE. 1 ~20 ON COLD NIGHTS STOCKING ARM-+ LETS ADD COMFORT TO SLEEVE- LESS NIGHTGOWNS, make the bedding seem scant. Or if the bedding is not, evenly distributed, in order to supply beds properly for the oldest members or those who are frail, what can he done to ‘warmth of bedding? ‘There are several ways to eke out the warmth and make covers otherwise in- adequate sufficient. A pair of thin blankets, used as sheets, will keep the body warm with fewer top blankets supplement. A WASHINGTON BY REV. JOHN R. GUNN. About Praising People. ‘The praise of them that do well— T Pet,, 11.14. To praise “ them that do well” is both a privilege and a duty. The trouble with many of us is that we do not know how to go about it. As the Greek said, “Many men know how to flatter, few men know how to praise.” Often we are too loud and fulsome in our praise. Such praise is to the hurt of those upon whom bestowed. Solomon said, “He that praiseth his friend aloud, rising early, it shall be to better- . Certainly’| ldt'u moderate praise, not vulgar, that oes B praise any one we reason for doing so. “It is this” says Steele, “which dis- tinguishes the approbation of a man of sense from the flattery of®sycophants ‘Whenever we should give our lwlhln‘&: ‘Whi and lavish with our praise, on the other hand we should not be too sparing and n|gudly ‘with it. We should count it a happy privilege, as well as luty, to nd those who do well, to give a friend due character. Often we can do people more good by a le word of commendation than in any other way. Commendation is one of the best stimulants to woru&:mu and noble effort. Try it out on &m- ple around you, and see how it works, DAYBOOK BY HERBERT PLUMMER. i FEW day ago carpenters and painters reported for work in a little Toom on the second floor of the Smithsonian Institution. They imme- diately started applying light yellow t to faded walls and patching holes @ worn floor. ‘Within a few hours the job was fin- ished. From across the hall came a young scientist just recently returned from the Southwest with huge crates of pre-historic Indian pottery.. Above the door he hung a sign which read: “Bureau of Eth- ‘was significant. marked the passing of the laboratory of learn to fly in his little laboratory at the Smith- sonian. And it .was in this room on the second floor that he perfected his work after so many heart-breaking failures, It was from this room that he took his model with his friend, Alexander Graham Bell, for tests at the little ‘wooded spot on the secluded island of Chopawamsic, near Quantico, on the Virginia shore of the Potomac some 30 miles below Washington, More than 20 times had he taken his plane down to Chopawamsic before suc- cess rewarded his efforts. Langley was watching from the shore when the big moment came. Bell was by his side with a pocket camera. As the little plane, powered with a midget steam engine which could re- volve the propeller only 1,200 times a minute, Tose in the air and flew down the Potomac for about & half mile, those who witnessed it .could hardly believe thelr eyes. Bell's pocket camera caught the ‘welrd-looking contraption in fiight. An | enlargement of his picture now hangs | from the wall of the first floor at the Smithsonian. That first flight was on May 6, 1896. | Six months later Langley again went out from his laboratory at the Smith- sonian with a larger model. Off Chop- awamsic, on November 28, he sent his model into the air. This time it flew three-quarters of a mile down the Po- tomac at a speed of 30 miles an hour. He returned to Washington and his laboratory, convinced that the day had arrived when man could fly. There are still many around the Smithsonian who remember the days when Langley worked so industriously in that little room on the second Joor. Already renowned for his work in the science of astrophysics, they followed his work In the new fleld with great interest and confidence. No ridicule or scorn such as emanated from other quarters at the time came from those who knew him there. They, better than any others, realize the truth of his assertion that: “Perhaps if it could have been fore- seen at the outset how much labor there was to be, how much of life wpuld be given to it, I might have hesitated to enter upon it at all.” And they, too, remember the pro- United States Senate and it's & pretty safe bet before you get very far some one will advise: “Go and talk it over with Charlie McNary.” For they all know on the hill that the dapper, well med, youthful appear- ing Senator from Oregon ‘haps keeps his ear closer to the political ground than any of his colleague. Very little indeed transpires around the Capitol that McNary is not familiar with. A Stanford University man and a per- sonal friend of Herbert Hoover, there 1s little doubt that many Senators have relied on the tall Oregonian for the cor- rect steer during the hectic days of this special session of Congress. But aside from his personal connections, it long has been recognized that McNary is a power in his own right. It occasioned no surprise, therefore, when Senator Jim Watson packed his bag and left the Senate for a thee week’s rest in Florida, that McNary's name was heard in_connection with conversations as to who would succeed to the majority leadership, had more weight recalled that Senator Wesley Jones, assistant majority leader, had previously declined to contest with ‘Watson for the post. . The name McNary is synonymous in the minds of most people with the words farm relief. As chairman of the Senate’s agricultural.committee, he and Representative Gilbert N. Haugen of Towa, in an effort to solve the difficulties of the farmers of the West and Middle ‘West, offered the McNary-Haugen bill. Because of the wide interest in the bill, it became one of the best known titles of proposed legislation that had appeared in Congress in years. 1t is as a champlon of farm relief that m:flnry now enjoys a national reputa- n. He was born on & farm, and from childhood has been familiar with the problems that confront the farmer. He confides that after making up his mind to be & senatorial candidate, he de- voted all of his time to an inten- sive study of agri- culture and its va- rious prohlems with a view to working for their relief in the cvent of his election. ‘Thus he became one of the best in- fomed men in the Northwest and later in the United States Senate on agricultural affairs. PFrom his first year in the Senate to the present he has fought the cause of the farmers. One of his first acts as a Senator was to take the side of the wheat growers. He was credited with the establishment of the primary wheat market, which saved 37.0100,000 or the farmers of the North- west. McNary enjoys tremendous personal | popularity among his colleagues, They | all respect his ability and admire him as a man. f As a committee chairman he is in- clined to grow a bit impatient at times with various witnesses and insists on direct answers to guestions he asks. ‘When not questioning a witness him- self, like his friend President Hoover, | he listens intently, meanwhile drawin phetic words he uttered at that time: “The world, indeed, would be supine if it did not realize that a new 1- has come to it, and that the great universal highway overhesd is now soon to be Start out in quest of the “lowdown” B A SUSSUOD Of UMDOIANGE figures on a pad before him. One morn- | ing, during hei on confirmation of | members of the (arm_board, he broke after pencil while When Nancy came to arrange her new linen closets she decided that she might as well settle upon some definite rules for loldln!nhe'r freshly laundered Hnen. Then, ving settled that, it would be easy to keep the shelves look- ing neat and uaf. She had small napkins of tea size, napkins used for breakfast and luncheon and the large dinner napkins. In addition, there were the tiny fruit or cocktail napkins, but these small bits of linen needed no folding. She instructed her laundress to fold the tea napkins in triangular folds. The breakfast napkins were folded into uares and then nally across. e dinner napkins were folded into thirds lengthwise and then thirds cross- Sometimes she placed them folded this fashion on the dinner plates. Sometimes she gave them a narrow, long appearance by tllmmg‘!n the two sides of the large square. the mono- was placed the corner she in three corners of the square to ve & shield shape. Sometimes she folded in two corners, which gave a six-sided figure, All of these last folds ;fie done loosely at time of setting e, 8he instructed the laundress to fold towels so that they could be hung on racks with no refolding, and sheets were to be folded into thirds lengthwise and then in as many cross folds as necessary. This always brought mono- gram on sheets in center top. Vrite to Nancy Page, care of this paper, 1 daressed - en inclosing & stamped. self-ac velope, asking for her leaflet on T'“f. of the Etiquette, |1t discusses other details well set table, MENU FOR A DAY. BREAKPFAST: Stewed figs, hominy with cream, bacon with fried apple slices, toast, coffee, LUNCHEON: Spanish omelet, French fried potatoes, taploca cream, brownies, tea. DINNER: Cream of mushroom soup, baked sausages, glazed sweet po- tatoes, brussel sprouts with cheese, pineapple salad, crackers, cheese, coffee. STEWED FIGS. Take the dried figs that come on a string. Discard any coarse stems from 2 cups dried figs and cover with water. A slice of Jemon or orange or short stick of cinnamon may be added. Bring to the boiling point until figs are tender and easily plerced with & toothpick, about 30 minutes. Add more water if n;cess.:ry, u;.nflg; should be enough water cover them as they boil. When tender add % cup of sugar and continue to boil until sirup forms, about one minute longer. SPANISH OMELET. O for each serving, % b ugnkln( powder, 2 table- n butter, sprinkle baking powder into egg :fnm, beat until stiff. Fold white into yolks. Heat frying or ‘omelet pan, put in butter and let run over pan evenly. Pour in eggs and cook slowly, When well puffed, lift the pan up on one side, slip turner under and fold. Serve on hot platter. SPROUTS WITH CHEESE. rim and wash one quart of . cook in boiling salted water thoroughly. of butter in saucepan, add the routs and toss over the fire un- :fl the butter is abscrbed, taking e not to let them brown. Sea- About a year ago I noticed an adver- tisement for a “psychologist to read tea leaves” in a fashionable tea Toom. My How peychology of tea Who in the world could possi- signficance to the chance arrangement of tea leaves in a know more than I did a year ago. le | T confess to a study of the question from the standpoint of the attitude of the public toward this brand of psychol- [ON Y am’convinced that tea leaf or tea- It embraces all that a great many people have in mind when they talk about psychology. . PARIS.—Molyneux's cape-back suit is young and very smart. The cape is stitched to the sleeves. Black is the only color for such a suit. Paris wears more black now than six months ago.—RITA. \DorothyDicx| Wouldn’t It Save a Lot of Heartache and Dis- appointment if Every Married Couple Were to Have an Official Diagram? Making Marriage o swre thing Advocates THE other day the rlewspapers told the story of & young couple that was ,‘olnl to take a bridal tour in an automobile, and had a road map printed on the back of the wedding invitations. Let us trust that this was more than an original idea, that it was a symbolic gesture. For after the marriage ceremony is over most brides and brid ms are filled with a panic of bewilderment and fear, and if they voiced the t!llullcn in their hearts they would ask: “Where do we go from here?” And it is a thousand pities that there isn't some official diagram that would show them how to get on Route No. 1 and stay on it, and the best and safest way to travel from the altar to their golden wedding. How many disappointments it would save if their chart showed them, to begin with, that the matrimonial road is not, as they fondly delude themselves into belleving, & smooth concrete highway on which they can step on the gas without a bump or a jar, or a°blowout, but that it is good and bad, with many a long stretch of rough and rocky , where the going is slow and hard, and where they will need every bit of power they have to pull through! What & lot of breakdowns in marriage it would save if the young Benedicts were furnished with a diagram that showed them that the beginning of the journey was mostly uphill, and that it was the worst and most dangerous part of it. Suppose they were warned beforehand that there were hills of misunderstanding and disillusionment to surmount; that there were mountains of adjustment they would have to negotiate, and that there would be years and years of hard work and inchh;l’ economies and sacrifices that it would take to climb up to fortune, but that if they had the nerve to make the grade it would be easy coasting for them down the sl_mny slopes of prosperity. . e . DON'T you think it would give many a disgruntled boy-husband and girl-wife the courage to stick on through the disappointment of finding that marriage isn't a level thway bordered with flowers, and keep them from turning back and bea it to the divorce court? ¢ ‘Think what catrastrophes it would prevent if the matrimonial road map indicated the many forks of the road where it is so0 easy for a couple to take the wrang turn and stray off the right route. Business or a career in whicl a man gets so immersed in making money, or striving for fame, that he forgets he has a wife, and his home comes to mean nothing to him but a place to eat and sleep and change his clothes. Children who take up all of a woman's time and thoughts and absorb her affections so completely that she is all mother, and no wife, and turns her husband into nothing but & cash register that she punches to pay the bills for her offspring. Or clubs, Or society. Lack of appreciation. Taking each other for granted. Oh, it is mighty easy to get off the right road in marriage, and next to impossible to get back after you have once done so. And what 2 lot of trouble would be saved if the matrimonial road map plainly indicated a nice, pleasant, safe detour around the personal idiosyncrasies of husbands and wives. It doesn’t take the bridegroom long to bump into nerves, and temper, and prejudices, and disagreeable little ways that he never suspected Maud had concealed about her angelic person. And before she knows it Maud goes slambang up against John’s little meannesses and cranki- ness, and it gives them a jolt that dislocates all of their previous conceptions of the hero and heroine of their romantic dreams. ‘They are pretty apt to go to smash if they persist in plowins & road that is impassable, and that the experience of thousands of other people ‘who have come to grief on it shows that one travels at one’s own risk. But all would be well if John and Maud would only follow the detour sign and steer around each other’s little peculiarities of disposition instead of crashing head- long into them; if John would only shut Maud’s mouth with a kiss instead through of trying to convince her in an argument, and if Maud would only jolly John S along the way she wants him to !o t.nst‘e-d. of trying to drive him into it. ND how invaluable to the young married couple it would be if the road map erected a few danger signals along the hairpin curves in wedlock where one is 5o liable to skid and go over the brink of the precipice, unless one drives carefully and slowly. Going at too fast a pace. Synthetic gin. Wild parties. silly flirtations. Jealousy. Quarrels. Lack of tact. Telling each other home truths. Perhaps if young couples realized how dangerous these things are, more of them would clamp down the emergency brakes on their tongues and'| keep to h\u middle of the road when they got to the perilous places in their married lives. And if the matrimonial road map had a few footnotes warning wives against being back-seat chauffeurs, and if it stressed the necessity of every married couple keeping the domestic machine well lubricated with the oil of flattery and their talk tank filled with the gas of interesting conversation, then, indeed, would it enable more husbands and wives to have a pleasant journey together and arrive safely at a contented and happy home, which all brides and ‘bridegrooms set out for, but few reach. DOROTHY DIX. through a food chopper. Add one and one-half cupfuls of boiled rice, one and one-half tablespoonfuls of chopped onion, and one tablespoonful of -butter. Season and form into cakes and saute in butter. Liver Risotto. Parboil one pound of beef or lamb liver, remove the skin, and put the liver bt Jodcsh oo Bl b i Soothes and protects “Your Skin ‘Why allow your skin to become chapped, coarse and dry when you can pretect it against these foes to beaunty with Plough’s Cold Cream? ‘This pure, dainty cream noarishes and refines the skin and keeps it smooth, clear and beautiful. B BLACKESWHITE COLD CREAM 2 _COFFE Today in Washington History BY DONALD A. CRAIG, November 20, 1858 —Speaker Orr of the House of Representatives returned to Washington this morning, and to- night he was serenaded at Brown's Hotel by a large assembly of his friends and admirers, accompanied by Wither's Brass Band. Snow was falling heavily when the serenaders arrived in front of the hotel, about 10:30 o'clock. Heedless of the snow, the band discoursed a number of delightful airs, surprising the guests, who had sought early repose, and “fill- ing the snow-clad ~atmosphere with agreeable harmony,” as one newspaper writer expressed it. Soon the repeated calls of the assem- blage had the desired effect of causing Speaker Orr to appear on the balcony. He was greeted with tremendous cheers, and when the enthusiasm had somewhat subsided he addressed the company as follows: “Fellow citizens: I thank you most cordially and heartily for this demon- stration. I prize it the more highly because of the inclemency of the eve- ning, and if proof were wanting the evening itself would furnish me with abundant evidence of your sincere re- gard. “I have been a recipient of many kindnesses from the citizens of Wash- ington. This is the tenth Winter of my residence among you, and perhaps the last” (Cries of “No, no!”), “and I feel many regrets at the stern fact that we are to part and that these kindly rela- tions are soon to be severed. “Since I have been a Representative and while filling the important office of Speaker of the popular branch of the ational Legislature, I have striven, as you all know, to preserve and perpetuate the Union of these States. I have been a party man, devoted to the principles of party, but the great object of my life has always been to defend and ad- vance the interests of the great Com- monwealth, (Cheers.) “During the 10 years I have had the honor to represent a portion of the people of South Carolina the waves of fanaticism have rolled with fearful ef- fect throughout the country and in this Capital of the Nation. Until the pres- ent time they have been successfully re- sisted, and I hope there will always be found conservatism and triotism enough to put out the fires of sectional strife and that concord and harmony will again be restored to the country.” Speaker Orr concluded by quoting “the great Webster” in the words, “Lib- erty and Union, now and forever, one and inseparable!” His speech was followed by loud and prolonged cheering. CRIME WAVES I ‘The crime wave often makes us fear that cheos, grim and black, is near. We read the tales of death and wreck, and sadly breathe the rname of Heck, and say, “This nation can't endure unless for crime we find a cure. The N4 murderers uncaught. courts seem helpless in the faceof this, our national disgrace; the cops, though brave and willing, feel it is beyond their strength and zeal. Our Govern- ment, which once was fine, stalled and should take in its sign.” When you are prone to feel this way, dig up a volume old and gray, that tells about the mundane show as ‘twas two hundred years ago. Then rogues in- fested every lane and robbed and slew the passing swain; it wasn't safe for any wight to leave his residence by night; nor was it safe to stay at home; some thief might swat him on the dome, and leave a fracture in his 3 and steal his jewels and his plate. And robbers of Dick Turpin's kind, who show up handsome and refined in foolish tales by foolish scribes, swarmed on the roads in lawless tribes. At every crossroads you would see a dark and creaking gallows-tree from which some villaing swung and swayed, that other rogues might be dismayed. But Nving villains did not care for all the corpses swinging there; no odds how hard the hangman wrought, there still were No man was safe in those grand times, -and history was built of crimes, When you have read an hour or two in books that give & proper view of life in those old darkened times, you'll cease to o'er modern crimes. WALT (Copyright, 1929.) WHO REMEMBERS? BY DICK MANSFIELD. Registered U. 8. Patent Office. YA N LN ~—When Mrs. Willlam F. Smith, wife of a well known bicycle manufacturer, was the first woman to ride a bicycle in the United States? FEATURES.' MILADY BEAUTIFUL BY LOIS LEEDS. Pimples. Pimples and blackheads on back and shoulders seem to be rather & common blemish to beauty, Many readers who write saying that their skin is in good condition otherwise complain of this annoying disfigurement. ~ And it is indeed most annoying and detrimental to beauty. During the last Summer the new gowns with sun-tan backs were taboo for the girl or woman who was troubled in this way and now that the ‘Winter soclal season is in full swing it is even more serious, as nothing will ruin the appearance of milady in her formal gown more quickly an the presence of such defects on her arms, back and shoulders. ‘The most frequent cause of black- heads or ilmrlu on any part of the body is lack of cleanliness. Milady may hesitate to admit that this is true, but while one may not neglect her daily bath and be very zealous in her desire to be always dainty, it is not always easy to keep the back and shoulders entirely free from oily excretions from the skin and from grime and dust. It is nearly always the more oily skin which is troubled with such blemishes as_blackheads. Bo in getting rid of these defects the first thing to do is to make sure that these parts are cleaned thoroughly every day. The best way to accomplish this is with the aid of a long-handled bath brush and a bath spray. With this simple equipment and plenty of warm water and soap it is possible to keep the skin between the shoulders as clean as the face. -After scrubbing well with the bath brush rince thoroughly and dry well. Then if the skin is inclined to be oily and coarse give it an alcohol rub, If it tends to be dry rub with a little cold cream. ~ However, the average skin ‘which is troubled with these blemishes is not likely to be dry, s0 after the bath and alcohol rub a mild as t may applied. One made of equal parts of glycerine and witch-hazel is good. Besides using these external tre ments the girl with enlarged pores must give special attention to her hygenic habits. She must avoid indigestion and r circulation. Several leaders who have complained of enlarged pores have in the same letter asked me what could be done to prevent cold hands and feet. Unconsclously in asking the it q{ m‘?euhrn‘dm o "G’ cause of pores—poor cir- culation. This is a condition which cannot be cured without some effort. But if one will make it a daily duty to take some outdoor exercise and perhaps & stimulating morning bath one will find that it peps up the circulation and tones up the whole body, including the DAILY DIET RECIPE HONEY DROP COOKIES, Shortening, 2 cup. Sugar, 1 cup. Honey, 2 tablespoons. Balt, % teaspoon. Eges, 2. Flour, 13 cups. Baking powder, 2 teaspoons. Vanilla, 2 teaspoon. MAKES ABOUT 100 COOKIES. Blend together butter or other shortening, sugar, honey and salt. Stir in eggs one at a time. Sift flour with baking powder and add this. Add vanilla. Drop o spoon batter for each a greased baking sheet, far enough apart, as they spread. A half wal- nut or pecan could be placed on each cookie if desired. e in & hot oven for about 8 minutes. Be careful not to burn. DIET NOTE. Recipe furnishes protein, starch, sugar and a little fat. Lime and of the gwn to children over 10. eaten by normal adults of av- erage or under weight. You will be wonderfally comfortable im and dainty yet contains sufficient « o 0. May \n,nld a in the privacy of your features and arrange for a tiny relaxed muscles around ulu. Fortunately, one’s physical self is being constantly renewed and by right living it is entirely possible o make healthy, active cells supplant the lagy old ones which mar one’s beauty. Diet, 0o, is most important in trying to get rid of enlarged pores. Avoid ricn food, pastries, sweets and condiments. Never let & day go by without eating a goodly amount of raw fruits, especially the citrus fruits, and raw vegetables, such as lettuce, cabbage, tomatoes and spinach. With careful attention to these three simple hygienic laws absolute cleanli- ness, proper dlet and daily exercise sucn defects as enl pores and black- heads will ually disappear and milady will be rewarded with the type of skin nature intended h!{ to have. “MY lipstick isn't always coming off?” “What do you use then? I've always wanted to ask you. I think yours looks 80 natural” “Why Kissproof, my dear—haven’t you heard of it? It the very latest thing in Paris and New York. You put it on in the morning and it stays on the whole day long. Look at mine—and I went bathing with Jim this morning!” “How lovely! Do let me try it.” “Here you are. Only just a touch now—that’s right. LX{P and down though—not across. ow rub it in well. Might be your own coloring, mightn't it, and you'll find it mever stains . . " Kissproof, the modern waterproof lipstick is everywhere revolution- izing women’s use of cosmetics. Every woman owes it to herself to try this amazingly permanent, ral coloring. Insist on the genuii *Send for Complete Kissproof Make-Up Kit Containing everything needed: 1. Kisproof {ipnick(Br:ss Case) 2. Kissproof Compact Rouge (with mirrer and puff) . Kissproof Face Powder (large box) . Kissproof Cream Rouge . Delica-Brow lash dressing (with camel's hair brush) . 16-page Make-Up booklet (“Clever Make-Up Nine-tenths of Beauty”) All for coupon below and only 30 cents (to partly cover cost and post- age). Not stingy samples—enough powder for six weeks—the full size packages would cost over $300. All in artistic case—ideal for your dress- ing table. Please act promptly—send coupon before you forget. Only one com- plete Kissproof Make-Up Kit per person. Caams. -”hlhhww in our comfe home ? Sh:.wlll :.y-‘:lllml its_exclusive fitting ortable pariors. CHAWRL OF WASHINGTON 1319 F St. N.W. Phone: National 7931-2

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